Antonella Artuso, Toronto Sun

Antonella Artuso began her career as a cop reporter at the Toronto Sun in 1989. After a 2 1/2 year stint covering the crime beat, she moved to Toronto City Hall where she reported on municipal politics for another three years. Just prior to the 1995 Ontario election, Artuso moved to Queen's Park where she has covered NDP, Conservative and Liberal governments and four provincial elections.

A new anti-tobacco strategy calls for sky-high
increases in taxes, a forced reduction in tobacco
retailers, a minimum purchase age of 21 and a
ban on all smoking displays, including vaping
paraphernalia.

TORONTO — The leader of Ontario’s
Opposition said Thursday he is
ignoring Premier Kathleen Wynne’s
request that he retract comments he
made about her, dismissing a warning
that he could face legal action as
“baseless.”

Google and YouTube’s screening process
for offensive content appears
contaminated by social justice
theorists and political correctness,
threatening the voice of half the
population that disagrees with their
point of view, University of Toronto
Professor Jordan Peterson says.

Since their earliest visits to Canada in the 1800s, the Royal Family has enthralled, entranced and captivated Canadians.Through good times and bad, and from coast to coast, we have mobbed public appearances and sent well wishes to the monarch and family members. Here are the stories of some who have been touched by royalty:

Premier Kathleen Wynne’s government
should block an attempt by Hydro One
to jack up distribution rates even as
its CEO takes home $4.5 million a
year, Progressive Conservative Leader
Patrick Brown says.

Premier Kathleen Wynne's plan to cut
hydro bills by 25% comes with an
electrifying price tag for the
government - anywhere between $63
billion to $93 billion if financed
with borrowed money, a review by the
province's Financial Accountability
Office concludes.